Stephen G. CECCHETTI Kermit L. SCHOENHOLTZ Understanding Risk Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Trade-off between Risk and Return
Advertisements

Risk Measuring Risk requires: List of all possible outcomes
Chapter 5. Measuring Risk Defining and measuring Risk aversion & implications Diversification Defining and measuring Risk aversion & implications Diversification.
Introduction to Risk and Return
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Return and Risk: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) Chapter.
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line Chapter Thirteen.
Chapter Outline Expected Returns and Variances of a portfolio
Uncertainty and Consumer Behavior
11-1 Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 A Brief History of Risk and Return.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 11 Risk and Return.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 13 Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk.
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line Lecture 11.
11.1 Expected Returns and Variances
Return and Risk: The Capital Asset Pricing Model Chapter 11 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Basic Tools of Finance Finance is the field that studies how people make decisions regarding the allocation of resources over time and the handling of.
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line Chapter Thirteen.
The Pricing of Risky Financial Assets Risk and Return.
Lesson 10-2 Principles of Saving and Investing LEARNING GOALS: -DISCUSS THE CONCEPT OF RISK VERSUS RETURN. -LIST AND EXPLAIN THE TYPES OF RISK THAT ARE.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
11-1 Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. A Brief History of Risk and Return 1.
Measuring Returns Converting Dollar Returns to Percentage Returns
Understanding Risk. 1.What is risk? 2.How can we measure risk?
Portfolio Management Lecture: 26 Course Code: MBF702.
Risks and Rates of Return
Risk and Capital Budgeting Chapter 13. Chapter 13 - Outline What is Risk? Risk Related Measurements Coefficient of Correlation The Efficient Frontier.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 27 The Basic Tools of Finance.
TOPIC THREE Chapter 4: Understanding Risk and Return By Diana Beal and Michelle Goyen.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. A Brief History of Risk and Return 1.
UNDERSTANDING RISK AND RETURN CHAPTER TWO Practical Investment Management Robert A. Strong.
Chapter 08 Risk and Rate of Return
Chapter 3 Arbitrage and Financial Decision Making
Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk.
Chapter 13 Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line Copyright © 2012 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk
Chapter 2 Risk Measurement and Metrics. Measuring the Outcomes of Uncertainty and Risk Risk is a consequence of uncertainty. Although they are connected,
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 5-1 Chapter 5 History of Interest Rates and Risk Premiums.
Stephen G. CECCHETTI Kermit L. SCHOENHOLTZ Understanding Risk Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management First Canadian Edition By Reilly, Brown, Hedges, Chang 6.
Chapter 5 Choice Under Uncertainty. Chapter 5Slide 2 Topics to be Discussed Describing Risk Preferences Toward Risk Reducing Risk The Demand for Risky.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Risk and Return.
1-1 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. A Brief History of Risk and Return 1.
FIN 819: lecture 4 Risk, Returns, CAPM and the Cost of Capital Where does the discount rate come from?
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible Web site, in whole or in part.
Uncertainty and Consumer Behavior Chapter 5. Uncertainty and Consumer Behavior 1.In order to compare the riskiness of alternative choices, we need to.
1 Estimating Return and Risk Chapter 7 Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Investor Choice: Risk and Reward.
1 THE FUTURE: RISK AND RETURN. 2 RISK AND RETURN If the future is known with certainty, all investors will hold assets offering the highest rate of return.
How to Build an Investment Portfolio The Determinants of Portfolio Choice The determinants of portfolio choice, sometimes referred to as determinants of.
Last Study Topics 75 Years of Capital Market History Measuring Risk
5-1 Economics: Theory Through Applications. 5-2 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Understanding Risk.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 13 Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line.
Chapter The Basic Tools of Finance 27. Present Value: Measuring the Time Value of Money Finance – Studies how people make decisions regarding Allocation.
Money and Banking Lecture 11. Review of the Previous Lecture Application of Present Value Concept Internal Rate of Return Bond Pricing Real Vs Nominal.
Risk Analysis “Risk” generally refers to outcomes that reduce return on an investment.
Money and Banking Lecture 10. Review of the Previous Lecture Application of Present Value Concept Compound Annual Rate Interest Rates vs Discount Rate.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 5 Understanding Risk.
Chapter 5 Understanding Risk
Chapter 11 Risk ad Return in Capital markets.
Principles of Investing FIN 330
Return, Risk, and the SML RWJ-Chapter 13.
Chapter Five Understanding Risk.
Money and Banking Lecture 12.
Presentation transcript:

Stephen G. CECCHETTI Kermit L. SCHOENHOLTZ Understanding Risk Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Five

5-2 Introduction Risk cannot be avoided. Everyday decisions involve financial and economic risk. How much car insurance should I buy? Should I refinance my mortgage now or later? We must have the capacity to measure risk to calculate a fair price for transferring risk.

5-3 Outline In this chapter we will: 1.Learn to measure risk and assess whether it will increase or decrease. 2.Understand why changes in risk lead to changes in the demand for a particular financial instrument. 3.Understand why change in risk lead to corresponding changes in the price of those instruments.

5-4 Defining Risk According to the dictionary, risk is “the possibility of loss or injury.” For outcomes of financial and economic decisions, we need a different definition. Risk is a measure of uncertainty about the future payoff to an investment, measured over some time horizon and relative to a benchmark.

5-5 Defining Risk 1.Risk is a measure that can be quantified. The riskier the investment, the less desirable and the lower the price. 2.Risk arises from uncertainty about the future. We do not know which of many possible outcomes will follow in the future. 3.Risk has to do with the future payoff of an investment. We must imagine all the possible payoffs and the likelihood of each.

5-6 Defining Risk 4.Definition of risk refers to an investment or group of investments. Investment described very broadly. 5.Risk must be measured over some time horizon. In general, risk over shorter periods is lower. 6.Risk must be measured relative to some benchmark - not in isolation. A good benchmark is the performance of a group of experienced investment advisors or money managers.

5-7 Measuring Risk We must become familiar with the mathematical concepts useful in thinking about random events. In determining expected inflation or expected return, we need to understand expected value. The investments return out of all possible values.

5-8 Probability theory states that considering uncertainty requires: Listing all the possible outcomes. Figuring out the chance of each one occurring. Probability is a measure of the likelihood that an event will occur. It is always between zero and one. Can also be stated as frequencies. Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value

5-9 Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value We can construct a table of all outcomes and probabilities for an event, like tossing a fair coin.

5-10 Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value If constructed correctly, the values in the probabilities column will sum to one. Assume instead we have an investment that can rise or fall in value. $1000 stock which can rise to $1400 or fall to $700. The amount you could get back is the investment’s payoff. We can construct a similar table and determine the investment’s expected value - the average or most likely outcome.

5-11 Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value Expected value is the mean - the sum of their probabilities multiplied by their payoffs. Expected Value = 1/2($700) + 1/2($1400) = $1050

5-12 Are you saving enough for retirement? You might be tempted to assume your investments will grow at a certain rate, but understand that is not the only possibility. You need to know what the possibilities are and how likely each one is. Then you can assess whether your retirement savings plan is risky or not.

5-13 What if $1000 Investment could 1.Rise in value to $2000, with probability of Rise in value to $1400, with probability of Fall in value to $700, with probability of Fall in value to $100, with probability of 0.1 Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value

5-14 Expected Value = 0.1x($100) + 0.4x($700) + 0.4x($1400) +0.1x($2000) = $1050 Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value

5-15 Possibilities, Probabilities, and Expected Value Using percentages allows comparison of returns regardless of the size of initial investment. The expected return in both cases is $50 on a $1000 investment, or 5 percent. Are the two investments the same? No - the second investment has a wider range of payoffs. Variability equals risk.

5-16 Measures of Risk It seems intuitive that the wider the range of outcomes, the greater the risk. A risk free asset is an investment whose future value is knows with certainty and whose return is the risk free rate of return. The payoff you receive is guaranteed and cannot vary. Measuring the spread allows us to measure the risk.

5-17 Variance and Standard Deviation The variance is the average of the squared deviations of the possible outcomes from their expected value, weighted by their probabilities. 1.Compute expected value. 2.Subtract expected value from each of the possible payoffs and square the result. 3.Multiply each result times the probability. 4.Add up the results.

5-18 Variance and Standard Deviation 1. Compute the expected value: ($1400 x ½) + ($700 x ½) = $ Subtract this from each of the possible payoffs and square the results: $1400 – $1050 = ($350) 2 = 122,500(dollars) 2 and $700 – $1050 = (–$350) 2 =122,500(dollars) 2 3. Multiply each result times its probability and add up the results: ½ [122,500(dollars) 2 ] + ½ [122,500(dollars) 2 ] =122,500(dollars) 2 The Standard deviation is the square root of the variance: = = = $350

5-19 The standard deviation is more useful because it deals in normal units, not squared units (like dollars-squared). We can calculate standard deviation into a percentage of the initial investment, $1000, or 35 percent. We can compare other investments to this one. Given a choice between two investments with equal expected payoffs, most will choose the one with the lower standard deviation. Variance and Standard Deviation

5-20 Measuring Risk: Case 2

5-21 Variance and Standard Deviation The greater the standard deviation, the higher the risk. Case one has a standard deviation of $350 Case two has a standard deviation of $528 Case one has lower risk. We can also see this graphically:

5-22 We can see Case 2 is more spread out - higher standard deviation. Variance and Standard Deviation

5-23 Car insurance is especially expensive for young drivers. You must have liability insurance by law. What about collision insurance? For older cars, usually not worth it. For other cars, the question is how much. Compare a higher deductible with premium paid.

5-24 Leverage adds to risks in the financial system. Leverage is the practice of borrowing to finance part of an investment. Although leverage does increase the expected return, it increases the standard deviation. Leverage magnifies the effect of price changes. If you borrow to purchase an asset, you increase both the expected return and the standard deviation by a leverage ratio of: Leverage Ratio = Cost of Investment/ Owner’s contribution to the purchase

5-25 Leverage compounds the worst possible outcome.

5-26 Value at Risk Sometimes we are less concerned with spread than with the worst possible outcome Example: We don’t want a bank to fail Value at Risk (VaR): The worst possible loss over a specific horizon at a given probability. For example, we can use this to assess whether a fixed or variable-rate mortgage is better.

5-27 Value at Risk For a mortgage, the worst case scenario means you cannot afford your mortgage and will lose you home. Expected value and standard deviation do not really tell you the risk you face, in this case. VaR answers the question: how much will I lose if the worst possible scenario occurs? Sometimes this is the most important question.

5-28 Systemic risks are threats to the system as a whole, not to a specific household, firm or market. Common exposure to a risk can threaten many intermediaries at the same time. A financial system may contain critical parts without which it cannot function. Obstacles to the flow of liquidity pose a catastrophic threat to the financial system.

5-29 Risk Aversion, the Risk Premium, and the Risk-Return Trade-off Most people do not like risk and will pay to avoid it because most of us are risk averse. Insurance is a good example of this. A risk averse investor will always prefer an investment with a certain return to one with the same expected return but any amount of uncertainty. Therefore, the riskier an investment, the higher the risk premium. There is a tradeoff between risk and expected return.

5-30 Sources of Risk: Idiosyncratic and Systematic Risk All risks can be classified into two groups: 1.Those affecting a small number of people but no one else: idiosyncratic or unique risks 2.Those affecting everyone: systematic or economy-wide risks

5-31 Sources of Risk: Idiosyncratic and Systematic Risk Idiosyncratic risks can be classified into two types: 1.A risk is bad for one sector of the economy but good for another. A rise in oil prices is bad for car industry but good for the energy industry. 2.Unique risks specific to one person or company and no one else.

5-32 Sources of Risk: Idiosyncratic and Systematic Risk

5-33 How much risk should you tolerate? Take a risk quiz (pg. 117): What would you do if a month after you invest the value drops 20%? Always ask yourself: How much can I risk to lose? The longer your time horizon (and the wealthier you are), the more risk you can tolerate.

5-34 Reducing Risk through Diversification Some people take on so much risk that a single big loss can wipe them out. Traders call this “blowing up.” Risk can be reduced through diversification, the principle of holding more than one risk at a time. This reduces the idiosyncratic risk an investor bears. One can hedge risks or spread them among many investments.

5-35 Hedging Risk Hedging is the strategy of reducing idiosyncratic risk by making two investments with opposing risks. If one industry is volatile, the payoffs are stable. Let’s compare three strategies for investing $100: Invest $100 in GE. Invest $100 in Texaco. Invest half in each company.

5-36 Investing $50 in each stock to ensure your payoff. Hedging has eliminated your risk entirely. Hedging Risk

5-37 You can’t always hedge as investments don’t always move in a predictable fashion. The alternative is to spread risk around. Find investments whose payoffs are unrelated. We need to look at the possibilities, probabilities and associated payoffs of different investments. Spreading Risk

5-38 Spreading Risk Let’s again compare three strategies for investing $1000: Invest $1000 in GE. Invest $1000 in Microsoft. Invest half in each company.

5-39 Spreading Risk We can see the distribution of outcomes from the possible investment strategies. This figure clearly shows spreading risk lowers the spread of outcome and lowers the risk.

5-40 Spreading Risk The more independent sources of risk you hold in your portfolio, the lower your overall risk. As we add more and more independent sources of risk, the standard deviation becomes negligible. Diversification through the spreading of risk is the basis for the insurance business.

5-41 When markets become illiquid, as they did during the financial crisis of , the correlations among payoffs from many different assets rose. The less related the payoffs, the greater the benefits of diversification. When the payoffs from different assets move together, or are highly correlated, the benefits of diversification erode.

Stephen G. CECCHETTI Kermit L. SCHOENHOLTZ Understanding Risk Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin End of Chapter Five